Volvo vs The World – What That Means In Malaysia

It wasn’t that long ago that Swedish marque Volvo was considered a sideliner in the Malaysian automotive landscape. While its German opposition sold in vast numbers, the little Swede was just that – little. It sold enough cars to keep the showrooms & service centres going with no compromise in quality, and profits were most certainly there, just meagre. If Malaysia didn’t have the advantage of having a fully-fledged Volvo factory in Shah Alam, we’d probably have to deal with 2-3 year delays on new models too.

But things have changed for Volvo. Since its takeover by Chinese automotive giant Geely, who quickly realised it was best to let the Swedes do their thing rather than PRC the crap out of it, the company has been going from strength-to-strength in recent years globally, and even locally. 

Pekin Auto’s new Volvo dealership, on the fringes of Johor Bharu

It was just the other day that we reported on our social media channels the upcoming opening of a new dealership on the outskirts of Johor Bharu, the 13th such dealership in Malaysia with many more set to come throughout 2019. This is all part of Volvo’s local office’s strategy to focus on the customer experience & dealer network, and already, “internal polls are showing positive results thanks to improvements made in these two key areas.”

We experienced this for ourselves at the opening of the AJ Premium Motors dealership in Batu Pahat, where we saw Volvo’s new showroom design language and brand ethos in full swing. From the intimately-professional conduct of its staff to its Scandinavian-chic design, you could tell that Volvo was serious about its transformation into a brand that could well and truly rival the German stalwarts. And the proof was in the pudding, with an increase in local sales for Volvo rising in excess of 60%.

But there is something else to it, too.

The other day I had the opportunity to sample the 2019 Mercedes-Benz C300 AMG-Line in its facelifted form, with its air suspension & Multibeam LED headlights and the like. It was a nice car no doubt, with its sculpted seats and fancy twin-screen COMAND system, but what really caught my eye was the wood trim. A black, open-pore Ash, it looked stunning on the centre console ‘slide’ and the door panels. But when I looked closer, I noticed something a little odd.

While the centre console and driver’s door panels featured black ash wood with ‘striped’ graining, the front passenger’s door had a more ‘circular’ grain. Of course, anyone will tell you that no tree grows in a mirror grain and that to achieve such a pattern would cost so much in time and effort, but it was the sort of thing that wrankled the experience a bit. It left me thinking if the 64-colour configurable ambient lighting system was made to distract me from what I would consider an oversight.

Look at how beautifully aligned all that wood trim is

But what really bothered me throughout my week with the C300 was the recollection of every Volvo Inscription I’d driven in recent years. From the XC60 to the S90 & V90, all the way up to the gargantuan XC90 – they’d all had matching, mirror-aligned wood finishes. On the centre console beneath the 9-inch Sensus touchscreen, it would meet in a beautiful V-formation on the inward-curved panel, and it created an effect of sheer quality and attention to detail. 

Volvo doesn’t scream and shout about this sort of thing. They just do it and let you be amazed.

Motoring journo veteran Chris Wee is also a former Volvo staffer, and he’s recalled multiple times the tagline they used to tout: “Bums in seats sell cars.” I’ve often heard relatives of mine, devoted to the Volvo brand, repeat something similar. ‘Volvo for Life’ was the tagline for many years, and for them, it meant that once you buy into a Volvo you’ll never buy anything else. 

A granduncle of mine bought his first Volvo in 2003, an S80. He proceeded to then buy the facelifted S80, and then the final-generation S80, and I believe that not long from now he’ll take the plunge and buy an S90. Volvo for life, indeed.

But there are greater ramifications to Volvo’s continued rise in Malaysia. For starters, the Malaysians who toil day-in and day-out to build Iron Mark-ed cars in Shah Alam will continue to be trained and re-trained to build better and better cars every day, keeping up with their peers the world over. Soon there will likely be more of them – with the locally-assembled Volvo XC40 compact SUV (which we will be reviewing soon) the first model in the brand’s history to attract a waiting list in Malaysia, we can only imagine that Volvo Car Malaysia is on the hunt for innovations and improvements that’ll improve their production speed & capacity.

The upcoming Volvo S60, already confirmed for our market

But it also means that they will soon be the standard-bearers not only for active safety in modern luxury cars, but also in quality of execution. With more Volvos taking to the roads, visibility of the brand is increasing. With improved visibility comes improved interest, which turns into more walk-in customers in showrooms, who will then put their bums in Swedish seats and experience what it’s like to have a Volvo in the family.

It doesn’t help the competition either that Volvo’s leasing programs are so attractive. 

Soon, it’ll be within reason that people will stop visiting the German showrooms by default, and place Volvo as a brand alongside them as they consider their next luxury car. Plug-in hybrid buyers will be the first to make that change I reckon, with Volvos still the only brand available locally that integrates its hybrid systems so seamlessly that it leaves no practical impact on the packaging of the car. And when they start doing that, I guarantee I will not be the only one going ‘Hey, wasn’t the wood in the Volvo nicer?’

It’s worth keeping this in mind, particularly if you’re from a rival manufacturer, that you also don’t have knurled aluminium finishes for the starter switch, volume dials, and drive-mode selectors. You also don’t have gorgeous yellow Kevlar cones hiding behind laser-cut speaker grilles (like Volvo does with their Bowers & Wilkins systems), or a cacophony of almost-orchestratic beeps & bongs to warn you that you left your lights on, a door ajar, or that you might not have shut the boot properly. 

And at the time of writing, the mainstream rivals also don’t offer half of the advanced driver assistance systems that come on every new Volvo as standard. If Malaysians opened their eyes a bit further and stopped worrying about resale value, the Germans would be slaughtered by now.

But mercifully, us Malaysians are a brand-conscious bunch, and so this will buy a few more years for the competition to buck up and rightfully claim that they’re ‘as good as.’ 

Editorial: Why A Rolls-Royce?

It’s a surprisingly common question, though you’d have to be pretty privileged to be able to ask it. Indeed, when I find myself behind the wheel of a Mercedes-Benz S-Class (an opportunity I must admit is afforded to me only because of my bloody awesome job), I too sometimes ask what the point is of spending so. much. more. money. in order to have the Spirit of Ecstasy guide my way.

I have owned an (older) S-Class and, once again thanks to my job, I’ve found myself behind the wheel of several Rolls-Royces in the past. For fairness I will talk about the smaller, ‘more accessible’ Rolls-Royce Ghost which so many like to point out is actually a BMW 7-Series beneath, as that would be the closest comparison to the superlative Mercedes-Benz S-Class, Audi A8, Jaguar XJ, and indeed the big 7er.

Yes, any of the aforementioned big limousines are excellent at separating you from the outside world. You are surrounded by double-glazed glass, fastidiously-polished veneer, and leather so soft it makes you wonder what skincare routine they subject these German (or sometimes English) cows to. You are often bombarded with the very latest technology that the industry can offer like AI-powered driver-assistance technology, the highest-fidelity audio systems, and more digital screens than your living room. They live up to their function as the pinnacle of the range, the culmination of whatever their respective parent companies can manage.

But, in a Rolls-Royce… 

A family photograph at the home of Rolls-Royce in Goodwood, England

A Rolls-Royce isn’t so much the best that Goodwood can manage, but it represents the very best that the entire motoring industry has managed up to that point, and it’s all tuned only to soothe, to relax, to isolate. While the ’S’ in ’S-Class’ may very well stand for ‘Superior’ (it doesn’t but let’s glaze over that quickly), a Rolls-Royce doesn’t need to remind you of its superiority. Where everything else must inform the masses of its opulence and grandeur, a Rolls-Royce simply is. It doesn’t even tap you on the shoulder to make way for its greatness – you make way for it just because you know, intrinsically, that you should.

Driving a Rolls-Royce Ghost, the ‘approachable’ Rolls-Royce I should mention, makes you feel immediately that you have arrived. Even when you’ve just borrowed one from your friend who really should leave his chequebook out when you come round, the Rolls-Royce lends you the stiff upper lip you need to pull it off convincingly. Instead of seeing a cabin festooned with buttons and technology like you would in a BMW 7-Series, you just get an analogue clock, acres of what used to be trees, and you’re sat on what used to be one of perhaps eight bulls have given their lives for your comfort. 

Hang on, I hear you saying. Did you say bulls rather than cows? Doesn’t leather come from cows?

Yes they do, my keenly observant friend. But Rolls-Royce doesn’t use hide from cows because cows get pregnant, and since we have not yet turned the page where it’s not okay to body shame livestock, pregnancy causes stretchmarks, which are not acceptable to adorn the passenger compartment of a Rolls-Royce. So they use bull hide because bulls, well, you get the picture.

This is the world a Rolls-Royce, any Rolls-Royce, presents to you. They don’t need you to know that they skin bulls, not cows, to appoint your cabin because all they need you to do is appreciate how soft, supple, and flawless the leather is. They don’t need you to know that a small clearing has been made in a sustainable, renewable forest in order to ensure the tops of your doors and the face of your dash feature the colour, texture, and grain that befits a product that rolls out of Goodwood. All you need to know is that, when you have left your office where you head some multinational multi-billion Ringgit business, you can find refuge in the rear of your Rolls-Royce where between the bustle of work and the adventures of home, you can gather your thoughts and prepare yourself for what lies ahead in absolute, perhaps even extreme comfort.

So the next time you find yourself asking, from the seat of your S-Class or 7-Series or XJ or A8 why anyone in their right mind would spend more money on anything but, I hope you find my answer satisfactory.

If you must ask, then a Rolls-Royce is not for you. It’s something you understand not in your head, but in your heart, in your veins. Venture into a Bentley perhaps if you have far too much money burning a hole in your pocket but a Rolls-Royce, is not for you.

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